Morocco

Transcription

Morocco
www.colas.com
ROUTES
Colas Group magazine number 27 - October 2011
En route
Morocco
Colas plays key role
in major projects
Piotr Klemensiewicz
«Droga»
2010
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ROUTES No. 27 – October 2011
www.fondationcolas.com
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CONTENTS NUMBER 27 – OCTOBER 2011
site-seeing
04 > From Denmark to Madagascar, via
Croatia and France… A rapid trip around
the world to see the Group’s jobsites, work
in progress and finished projects.
en route
20 > Colas Morocco’s renowned expertise
deployed on major projects.
28 > An extreme project near the
Bering Sea.
itineraries
34 > They all do their jobs with enthusiasm
and have decided to share their daily routine
and projects with us.
special report
44 > Tramways: multimodal know-how.
in the picture
60 > Meetings, films, awards, signings, sports
and cultural events... Here are a few images
of Group events in France and around the world.
horizons
people
70 > Pierre Terzian: “Energy savings and solar
power are the best alternative energy sources.”
72 > Yann Arthus-Bertrand: “Thanks to the
mobilization of Colas employees, the ‘On the Road
to School’ program will achieve the momentum
it deserves.”
sponsorship
74 > Togo: a new country for the “On the Road
to School” program.
76 > Lengguru: Indonesia’s treasure trove
of biodiversity.
78 > Colas Foundation: Piotr Klemensiewicz.
crossroads
50 > Human resources, environment,
equipment... A look at recent months
of Group life.
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Cover photo: Mosaic pillars inside the Mnebhi Palace,
Marrakech, Morocco.
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editorial 03
by Hervé Le Bouc
Fostering entrepreneurial spirit
Being creative
Developing responsibly
we are to face the bumps that lie
ahead of us in today’s durably troubled,
unpredictable environment, our strategy
and our actions must more than ever
be bolstered by principles built upon a vision.
If
The cornerstones of this vision rest upon our
own fundamentals, that which makes us proud
to belong to the Colas Group, that which gives
meaning to our daily actions and underlies
our beliefs and our behavior.
This vision hinges around three key ideas: fostering
entrepreneurial spirit, being creative, developing
responsibly.
Fostering entrepreneurial spirit. You love
challenges. You enjoy building, managing risks,
discovering new horizons, working as a team.
You control and manage risks with rigor, turning
them into opportunity. This is the foundation
of Colas’ business development model based
on the profitable growth that made the Group
a world leader.
Being creative. You are a pioneer and a ground
breaker. Your vision is one step ahead of the others.
New locations, diversified business opportunities,
new offers for new markets, technological,
social, societal, environmental innovation: Colas
is conquering new frontiers every day, backed
by deep local roots inherent to its businesses
and the strength of a Group with a global approach
that fosters convergence and sharing.
Developing responsibly. The most vital thing a
company can do is provide high quality services
and products to its clients at competitive prices.
But it also has the duty to develop responsibly.
Corporate responsibility means focusing on human
issues: opening up jobs to diversity, safety, training
and promoting employees. Corporate responsibility
also covers society as a whole, via environmental
protection, ethics and aid to countries that welcome
us. Colas has chosen to act as a responsible
corporate citizen.
These three key ideas have formed Colas’ corporate
identity, setting the Group apart from others.
This vision shows that we are a group of men and
women with strong entrepreneurial spirit, a powerful
sense of solidarity, men and women who invent
and use eco-responsible technologies every day,
with the aim to create and maintain transport
infrastructure, for today and tomorrow.
Fostering entrepreneurial spirit, being creative
and developing responsibly means knowing how
to juggle constraints with the freedom to grow
and dream. Dream, then dare to make that dream
come true.
I would like to challenge each of you to make this
vision your own and to make it come true together.
This is how Colas will continue to pave the way
forward even through the storm.
ROUTES No. 27 – October 2011
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04 site-seeing
From Denmark to Madagascar
via Croatia and France… A roundthe-world tour in pictures of the Group’s
worksites, projects and other activities.
>
FRANCE
Belgium Denmark
Poland
France
Switzerland Croatia
Djibouti
Martinique
Madagascar
Térénez: in harmony with nature
The port of Terenez in Brittany,
France needed to be partially
redeveloped in order to make
the seaside promenade more
accessible, make the sidewalks
wider and extend the parking lot.
However, Terenez is a listed site,
protected by the Natura 2000
charter, a fact that had to be
taken into account in the project
planning. Colas Centre-Ouest
in Quimper (Morlaix sector) was
therefore particularly attentive
to the choice of materials. The
organic deactivated concrete
selected contains no solvents
and respects the environment.
It also has another advantage
in that it shows the natural color
of the aggregate. Gritted and
grass-seeded ecomineral paving
slabs were laid. A mixture of soil
and stone was used for fill, while
sanding was performed with
100% recycled glass cement.
The work was interrupted over
the summer to enable sightseers
to take full advantage of this
attractive site, but has now been
completed. <
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MADAGASCAR
Colas Madagascar
hits the heights
100 meters high, 42 meters long
and 20 meters wide, Tower 786,
nearing completion in the
Ankorondrano business district
in Antananarivo, is breathtaking.
With thirty stories, it is the tallest
building in the Indian Ocean islands.
And a first for Colas Madagascar,
which has shown its ability
to construct high-rise buildings.
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FRANCE
A safer road
To increase safety on the
Centre Europe Atlantique road,
the former national road
linking the A20 in the Creuse
département and the A71 in
the Allier has been converted
into a four-lane highway.
The contribution of
Colas Rhône-Alpes-Auvergne
consisted of four separate
projects. Colas Sud-Ouest’s
Limoges profit center was also
involved, as was Colas Est, which
provided a mobile mixing plant,
and Aximum, which installed the
safety barriers and noise walls.
DENMARK
Completion
of M3 motorway project
Colas Danmark completed the widening
of the M3 motorway – the ring road around
Copenhagen – in early August. The project, begun
in 2005 and divided into four contracts, has
transformed a 4-lane road into a 6-lane road. The
teams at Colas Danmark wrapped up the final phase.
The Transport Ministry wanted the work to be done
in the summer, when the traffic is much less intense.
Normally, nearly 125,000 vehicles use the M3
motorway everyday, but traffic drops off significantly
in the summer. So as to not disrupt traffic, teams
mainly worked in the evening and at the night.
Another noteworthy point: 126,000 square meters
of noise-reducing asphalt (Rugosoft®) were used.<
ROUTES N°
année2011
No. 00
27 mois
– October
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FRANCE
A new stadium in
Lille: responsible
development
The Lille/Dunkerque profit center
of Colas Nord-Picardie is taking
part in the Lille Grand Stadium
project. The teams are
redeveloping a freeway
interchange and – in a consortium
with the Wawrin branch of Screg
Nord-Picardie – an access ramp
from Boulevard de Tournai.
Warm-mix asphalt incorporating
reclaimed asphalt pavement or
RAP (3E®+R) and noise-reducing
surfacing (Nanosoft®) are being
used on the two sites.
The Grand Stadium project
meets responsible development
requirements and involves a total
of 20,000 hours’ work by people
on job market entry schemes.
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FRANCE
Welcome to the bonobos!
In October 2010, Sacer
Atlantique’s Bonnefoy Palmier
profit center received an
unusual request… from the
La Vallée des Singes primate
reserve. It was asked to lay out
the habitat of the reserve’s new
residents, nine bonobo apes.
The park wanted the bonobos
to be able to roam freely but also
wanted to make sure that visitors
would be safe. Since bonobos
are afraid of water, it was decided
to build a moat 500 meters long
and 10 meters wide between
the wooded one-hectare island
where the bonobos would live
and the visitors’ observation point.
The challenge for Bonnefoy
Palmier was to finish building
the retaining walls and the
waterproofing geomembrane, on
clayey soil, before the cut-off date.
Work had to be completed before
the park reopened in early April
2011. The builders were slowed
by snowstorms last November
and December. And they also
had to cope with the enthusiasm
of the primates, wandering around
and eager to help out. Despite all
these setbacks, Bonobo Island
was completed on schedule and
opened by the prefect and the
president of the general council
of the Vienne department.<
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FRANCE
A 29: for the future
canal
As part of the project to build
a navigable Seine-Northern
Europe Canal between the Oise
River and the Dunkerque-Escaut
Canal, the Amiens profit center
and the Technology and
Development Department of
Colas Nord-Picardie, along with
Helary TP (Colas Centre-Ouest),
worked to lower a 1.2 km section
of the A29 highway by eight
meters to allow the future
waterway to pass overhead
on a canal bridge.
DJIBOUTI
Japanese
defense department
chooses Colas
To combat piracy off the Somali coast, the
Japanese defense department signed an
agreement with the government of Djibouti
to build an air base at the international airport.
Colas Djibouti, in a consortium with a local company,
was awarded part of the project. The work involved
constructing a 30,000 m² aircraft parking area and
a taxiway to the airport’s runway. It also included
access roads and drainage, vehicle parking areas,
the slabs of the hangars, as well as housing for the
300 Japanese military personnel who will be deployed
at the base. Despite the very short eight-month
deadline and the lack of drawings before work started,
the highly motivated team of experts, totaling some
120 people, have done a flawless job. <
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MARTINIQUE
Rodal® in the tropics
Working at night, teams from
Colas Martinique successfully
laid a 7-centimeter layer
of porous asphalt mix
percolated with cement slurry
as part of a restructuring project
at the Port of Fort-de-France
container terminal. This is
the first time the technique –
which is ideal for surfaces such
as storage areas that are subject
to high mechanical stress –
has been used in the tropics.
FRANCE
Rouen: dialogue
with local residents
The six apartment blocks in the Verdi
complex, located in the Grand’Mare district
east of Rouen in Normandy, had lost their former
luster. A massive refurbishment and restructuring
project was undertaken as part of an urban
revitalization scheme. The Building profit center
of Colas Ile-de-France - Normandie and Jouen
(Screg Ile-de-France - Normandie) were awarded
the contract for the project. Working on an
occupied site, the teams did everything to keep
disturbance to the residents to a minimum
and, above all, to maintain ongoing dialogue.
For example, a mediator was appointed, briefings
were organized for the tenants, a regular
newsletter was delivered, and a fully refurbished
show apartment featuring new wiring, heating
and decor was opened for inspection. As a result,
the three-year project went off smoothly. <
ROUTES N°
année2011
No. 00
27 mois
– October
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FRANCE
Cap Ferret: a bike
path that blends in
With its concrete surfacing
matching the color of the
Pyla Dune sand and its timber
separators, the bike path through
the village of La Vigne to Cap Ferret
in south-western France blends
perfectly into the surrounding
landscape. The project was
carried out by Van Cuyck TP
(Screg Sud-Ouest).
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FRANCE
Synergy at work
on the RN 147 project
The Fleuré bypass on Route RN 147 between
Limoges and Poitiers is a fine example of synergy
within the Group. The Colas Centre-Ouest profit
center in Châtellerault, the Screg Ouest and
Sacer Atlantique profit centers in Poitiers, together
with Aximum, built and marked this 7.5-kilometer
section of four-lane road. They were supported
by several other units: Bonnefoy Palmier
(Sacer Atlantique), Hélary, Erco and the Airvault
and Châteauroux centers of Colas Centre-Ouest.
Responsible development products and
processes were used throughout, including 25%
reclaimed asphalt pavement, the Active Joint®
process, which helps prevent surface cracking,
and the Coletanche® waterproofing membrane.
This two-year project involved around 60 people
at the busiest periods.<
FRANCE
Piecing a high school
together
The Marianne hotel
management and catering high
school in Montpellier is a true
architectural feat. The exterior
cladding and mastic asphalt
waterproofing were entrusted
to the Toulouse - Acier branch
of Smac Sud-Ouest. The
process for attaching the
triangular components was
developed by a Lyon-based
team from Smac Eurofaçade®
before work began.
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CROATIA
The Istria highway:
a showcase for
Signalinea
A 120-km four-lane highway
has just been built in Istria
in northern Croatia. Teams from
Signalinea, Aximum’s Croatian
subsidiary specialized in road
markings, were responsible for
the safety equipment and markings, including median strips,
crash barriers and MultiDot
paint, which offers high nighttime visibility in rainy weather.
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FRANCE
Epinay-sur-Seine:
demolition in kid
gloves
Teams from Brunel Démolition
and Genier-Deforge,
deconstruction subsidiaries
of Colas Ile-de-France –
Normandie, brought down
a group of buildings as part
of a project to revitalize the
Paris suburb of Epinay-surSeine. The teams’ top priorities
were safety, welfare of local
residents and environmental
protection.
FRANCE
Green makeover
for the Les Ambrosis stadium
With its synthetic grass and rainwater retention
pond, the new football stadium in Plan-de-Cuques
near Marseilles scores points for the environment.
The project was not an easy one. Harvesting
rainwater from the stadium and the nearby avenue
required a pond with a capacity of 2,600 m3. But
because the stadium is located in an urban area, the
lack of space seemed to pose an insoluble problem.
So teams from the Bouches-du-Rhône Provence
agency at Sacer Sud-Est built two ponds, one of
them under the parking lot. The second special
feature is the use of the Sacerpack® process for
the artificial grass. In accordance with the standards
set by FIFA and the French Football Federation,
this technique, which combines synthetic grass with
a layer of porous asphalt, produces a more even,
better drained surface. The result is a field that will
serve several generations of soccer players! <
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POLAND
Euro 2012: major roadworks in Poznań
The project to expand
Bukowska Avenue in Poznań
into a four-lane highway
aims not only to improve traffic
flow and safety on this busy
thoroughfare but also to
increase its capacity. The road,
which links the airport to the
A2 highway and the football
stadium, must be able to
accommodate the heavy traffic
expected for the Euro 2012
soccer championship*. Work
began in November 2009
and was undertaken by
Colas Polska in a consortium.
It included application of
Rugosoft®, a noise-reducing
skid-resistant asphalt mix that
cuts rolling noise by 7 dB (A);
installation of noise barriers;
construction of bridges,
networks, drainage; and road
markings. What’s more, the
Edwardowo Gate, an early 20th
century brick archway weighing
40 tons, had to be moved
40 meters, or some 132 feet.
This major project has given
Colas Polska an excellent
calling card for the future. <
* Hosted by Poland and Ukraine.
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BELGIUM
Brussels city center
gets a makeover
Part of the charm of Brussel’s
Grand-Place is the surrounding
pedestrian area. Since April
these streets have undergone
a major refurbishment. The teams
from Wegebo, a subsidiary
of Colas Belgium, have been
laying natural paving stones
and cobblestones, plus borders
in Belgian bluestone. Working
in such a bustling, lively area
has necessitated a precise
phasing schedule.
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FRANCE
Vegeclair®
goes south
As part of the renovation
of the esplanade in front
of the town hall in Cuzorn,
in Lot-et-Garonne, south-western
France, the Colas Sud-Ouest
branch in Agen used asphalt
with Vegeclair®, a fully-recyclable
carbon-negative binder. Vegeclair®
is also transparent, allowing
the natural color of the aggregate
to show through.
FRANCE
A major
earthworks project
Sita France, a Suez Environnement subsidiary
specialized in waste processing and recovery,
selected Perrier TP’s earthworks and demolition
center (Colas Rhône-Alpes - Auvergne) to extend
its landfill in Grenay near Lyon. Work started in
January and will last 15 months. The project covers
earthworks, construction of the passive barrier
to seal the landfill, installation of a bentonite liner
for the waste storage cells, and lastly construction
of roads to access the cells. The earthworks
operations have already been completed.
They required 18 earthmoving machines.
1,100,000 m3 of material was excavated at
a rate of 7,000 m3 per day. More than half of
this material (600,000 m3) was reused as filler
for the embankments or stored on-site to be
used as required by the project developer.
The remaining 500,000 m3, consisting of noble
materials, was removed from the site.<
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SWITZERLAND
Fribourg:
a colorful start to the school year
At the end of August, the children from four
schools in Fribourg were in for a surprise
when they went back to school after the
summer holidays: colored surfacing had been
installed over the break! Colas Suisse’s Mittelland
profit center was awarded a contract to apply
8,600m2 of colored asphalt mix in specially
designed shapes. In front of the buildings,
the surfacing was divided into some 100
triangles with light gray, dark gray, yellow,
white, red and green outlines. This kaleidoscope
was punctuated with grass and gravel areas.
The rear of the buildings was bordered with
white geometric shapes. While the Mittelland
profit center already had some experience
in colored mixes, this was the first time they
had surfaced such a large area and in so many
different colors. <
FRANCE
A4: more synergy
To enhance driver safety on
highway A4, Sanef* began to upgrade
a 113-km stretch of road between
Metz/Saint-Privat in Moselle and
Fresnes-en-Woëvre in Meuse.
The project was handled by the
teams from Screg Est Grands
Travaux, Colas Est’s Metz profit
center and Côte-d’Or and Meurtheet-Moselle branches. Colas Rail
hauled the aggregates, and Aximum
took care of the marking and signing.
Yet another story of successful
synergy!
* Société des autoroutes du nord
et de l’est de la France (“Northern and
Eastern French Highway Company”)
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FRANCE
Express lining in Nancy
Under a four-year lease signed
in October 2008 with the
metropolitan area of Greater
Nancy, the Drainage and
Environment Division of Screg
Ile-de-France - Normandie
renovated the sewer drainage
system using a trenchless
installation technique called
continuous lining, which
significantly reduces nuisance
for neighboring residents.
FRANCE
A green bypass
in Chanos-Curson
To divert heavy truck traffic away from the
village of Chanos-Curson in south-east France,
the Drôme General Council contracted Colas
Rhône-Alpes - Auvergne and Sacer Sud-Est to
build the D532 bypass. The teams from Perrier TP
(Colas Rhône-Alpes - Auvergne) were responsible
for the earthworks, the capping layer and drainage,
and the teams from the Ardèche-Drôme profit
center (Colas Rhône-Alpes - Auvergne) and the
Sacer Sud-Est branch in Valence did the surfacing
on this 6-km section of road. The 44,000 tons
of asphalt mix were manufactured at a low
temperature with a high percentage of reclaimed
asphalt pavement (RAP): 35% in the base course
and 30% in the wearing course. This 3E®+R
process, which combines warm asphalt with RAP,
saves both energy and materials, and reduces
greenhouse gas emissions. <
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Colas
Morocco’s
renowned expertise
deployed on major projects
Since the king, Mohammed VI, launched a program
involving major development projects in 2005,
infrastructure work has been multiplying in Morocco. This has given
the local subsidiaries an opportunity to demonstrate their know-how.
From Casablanca to Tangiers, via Kenitra and Rabat, here
is a roundup of the work in progress.
MOROCCO
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THE RABAT-SALE TRAM
The Rabat tram, which went
into service in May 2011, was
built by GTR and Colas Rail.
The tram links the capital city
to Salé on the opposite shore
of the Bouregreg River.
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en route 23
MOROCCO
Tangiers
Rabat Kenitra
Casablanca
Essaouira
Marrakesh
T
rams, high speed railway lines, motorway
upgrades, manufacturing sites, streetscaping… the many
projects under way in
the kingdom offer the
Moroccan subsidiaries opportunities to
deploy their know-how and innovative
techniques.
One tram leads to another
In Casablanca, the streets of the city
center are always busy, but since the
beginning of the year they have become
even busier with the new tram construction site. After the capital Rabat,
Morocco’s largest city is installing a tram
system and, as on the Rabat tram,
Colas is actively involved in the project.
The consortium of Colas Rail and the
Moroccan subsidiaries LRM, GTR and
Urbis Signalétique won the contract for
Sector 2, which comprises the civil
engineering works and the installation
MOROCCO
• Area: 712,550 km2
• Population: 32 million
• Capital: Rabat
• Official language: Arabic
• Currency: Moroccan dirham
• Political system: constitutional monarchy
of 9 km of tracks, as well as the ancillary work, including all the cables and
pipelines and the road surfacing, along
an 800-meter section through the city
center. “The experience we gained in
Rabat gives us the confidence to handle the kinds of things that come up on
this type of project,” explains François
Dillies, civil engineering operations
manager at LRM. “The most complex
aspect is managing relations with
neighboring residents… especially
since we are building the most central
part of the track.” The work is scheduled
for completion in mid-2012 and should
go into operation at the end of 2012.
Quality development
To support the development of the
capital city, Rabat, Terminal 1 of Rabat-Salé
Airport, which has been closed for three
years, is to be reopened. The national airport authority, Onda, wants to increase the
annual number of passengers using the
airport from 400,000 to 1.5 million. After
EMULSIONS
More than
1/4 of national
production
Colas’ emulsions
business in Morocco
is split between three
companies: Colas
Emulsions, Smet
and Somebo. Colas
Emulsions has three
manufacturing plants
– in Rabat, Meknes
and Agadir – and
a warehouse in
Tangiers, Smet has
a plant in Marrakesh
and Somebo has
a plant in Oujda.
With annual production
of around 30,000 metric
tons, Colas Morocco’s
emulsion plants
account for 25% to
30% of national output.
Some 60% is used
by Colas Morocco
companies.
FRANÇOIS DILLIES
CHANGE IS STIMULATING
In 1981, François Dillies joined GTE (since renamed GTOI), a Colas
subsidiary based on Reunion Island. He had just completed his military
service and wanted to stay on the island to put his experience as
a site foreman to use. François was rapidly promoted to superintendent.
Over the years, he rose through the ranks and traveled a lot. “I spent
28 years in the Indian Ocean, between Reunion Island, Mayotte,
Mauritius and Madagascar. I signed up for expatriation and like the
stimulation of a new job!” Now in Morocco, François is area manager
at LRM, as well as civil engineering operations manager on the
Casablanca tram project. “On this type of project, the main thing
is to keep calm and take time to think.” They say that wisdom
is the fruit of experience.
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THE RABAT-KENITRA
MOTORWAY
For the first time in Morocco,
RAP was used on a section
of motorway.
> REINFORCING THE
RABAT – KENITRA
MOTORWAY
84
km
including toll areas
and interchanges
300,000
metric tons of mix
4,500
metric tons laid in a
single day: a record!
17%
RAP content
a call for bids for the roads and
ancillary works (including the access
roads to the terminal, the esplanade
in beige asphalt, the street furniture,
signs and road markings, all the
cables and pipelines and annex buildings), Onda selected GTR and Urbis
Signalétique. “This project was an
opportunity for us to show that GTR
knew how to build more than just roads,”
explains Romain Lassonery, head of
GTR’s Rabat profit center. The work
was completed in just three months,
and involved more than 150 employees. The result is impressive: the stone
columns and rows of vegetation look
stunning and, as the architect intended,
are reminiscent of the famous square
around Hassan Tower.
Reclaimed asphalt used on
a motorway for the first time
The motorway between Tangiers
and the capital is a vital link. Not long
ago, a team from GTR’s Rabat center
did overlay work on the Rabat-Kenitra
section. It was an innovative project
because for the first time in Morocco
the asphalt contained 17% reclaimed
asphalt pavement (RAP). “We were
selected by Morocco’s national road
company, ADM, on the basis of this
technique,” explains Houssam Aidi,
superintendent. “The customer understood the economic benefit of this
option, which also fits in perfectly with
ADM’s environmental policy.” The central laboratory in Casablanca contributed to this initial experience, which
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THE RENAULT-NISSAN
PLANTS IN TANGIERS
One of GTR’s contribution to
this project included earthwork
on the 300-hectare platform.
used two asphalt plants with peak production rates of 370 metric tons an hour.
Impressed by the project, ADM awarded
GTR with another motorway section,
between Asilah and Sidi El Yamani,
closer to Tangiers. “On this project comprising a total of 75,000 metric tons of
asphalt, we are going to try to raise the
RAP content to 20%,” adds Houssam.
Renault-Nissan plants: gigantic
projects
If one had to pick a single flagship
project from the many in which the
subsidiaries are involved, it would probably be the Renault-Nissan plants
being built in Meloussa, outside
Tangiers. On a 300-hectare site, a
massive manufacturing complex is
KHALIL HABIBI
MUTUAL LOYALTY
Khalil Habibi knows GTR like the back of his hand.
After all, he has been working for the company for
32 years. “I got my first job here and look forward
to finishing my career at GTR!” He remembers his
first project as if it were yesterday: widening and
reinforcing a road in Sidi Slimane. A works manager
taught him the job. “GTR is an excellent company:
the staff are very professional and there’s a real team
spirit.” His most memorable projects include building
a runway at Casablanca Airport and the Rabat-Kenitra
motorway, which he has just finished. “We broke
productivity and scheduling records. I had never
seen anything like it!”
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RABAT-SALE AIRPORT
GTR and Urbis Signalétique
built the roads and surrounding
outdoor areas in just three
months. The columns are
reminiscent of the famous
square around Hassan Tower
in Rabat.
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en route 27
rising from the ground. It will eventually
comprise three assembly lines, with an
annual production of 400,000 vehicles.
The teams from GTR have been involved
since the work began in 2008. “As part
of a consortium, we did the earthworks,
amounting to 4 million m3 of cut and 3
million m3 of fill,” explains Tarik Jordane,
superintendent at GTR’s Tangiers profit
center. “Since we were already on the site
and had shown our reliability, the customer asked us to build the temporary
platforms for the companies working on
the site. After that we installed main services on a large sector.” Urbis Signalétique
was also involved, building the test track
for vehicles that come off the assembly
lines, for example. GTR is already bidding
for the contract covering the installation
of the second assembly line.
Projects starting up after
the summer
Not far from the Renault-Nissan
plants, the high-speed train to Agadir
will flash past in a few years’ time. The
national high-speed rail plan provides
for a 1,500-km high-speed network
based on two main lines: the TangiersAgadir Atlantic line (running through
Rabat, Casablanca, Marrakesh and
Essaouira) and the Casablanca-RabatOujda Maghreb line. Construction has
just begun on the first section between
Tangiers and Kenitra. GTR has been
awarded a contract involving earthworks.
“The project involves 5 million m3 of cut,
2.5 million m3 of fill, and 505,000 m3 of
noble materials in floodplains,” explains
Faïçal Lahmansi, manager of GTR. “The
problematic aspects of the project are
threefold: the type of soil (pelitic, clayey
soils), management of waste rock – we
need to find land for disposal – and
access to noble materials. We need to
identify high-quality quarries in proximity
to the site.”
Back in Casablanca, a new major
project is starting for LRM: upgrading a
highway bypass of the country’s economic capital. The contract is part of the
2011 motorway upgrade program. After
175,000 m2 of planing, the teams from
LRM’s Casablanca center will lay
120,000 metric tons of asphalt along a
50-km section. “As for the work on the
Rabat-Kenitra section led by GTR, we
are going to use 20% of RAP,” explains
Vincent Grossi, manager of LRM’s
Casablanca center. There’s no doubt,
Colas Morocco’s expertise, environmental know-how and business techniques
are an asset! > OUTDOOR AREAS
AT RABAT-SALE
AIRPORT
36,000
m2
of paved roads
12,000
m2
of mastic asphalt
surfacing
30
km
of networks
500
lights
BORIS BAGEZ-BERNET
THE TRAVEL BUG
On the construction site of the Renault-Nissan plants in Tangiers,
you can hear the singsong accent of south-western France!
Site foreman Boris Bagez-Bernet began his career with the Group
at the Screg Sud-Ouest office in the Landes département.
“I always wanted an overseas job, and Morocco was my first choice…
maybe because I met my fiancée here on vacation.” His first project
overseas was the Rabat tram. It was a successful first run and GTR
management decided to assign him to the Renault-Nissan project.
“On this project, I’m also training local employees and learning Arabic
at the same time!” This unique experience has given him a taste
for other international projects… with his Moroccan wife.
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28 en route
ALASKA
ALASKA
• 49th state of the United States
• Area: 663,268 sq miles
• Population: 710,000
• Capital: Juneau
• Most populated city: Anchorage
• Official language: English
• Currency: US dollar
Chefornak
Anchorage
Juneau
A logistics challenge, a team of specialists,
a race against time, in particularly difficult
weather conditions, this autumn, Colaska is completing
the first stage in the building of a new airport in the remote
village of Chefornak in Alaska.
ALASKA
Extreme project
near the Bering Sea
A
laska is the biggest
state in the USA, measuring over 660,000 sq.
miles, and also has by
far the harshest climate.
In Chefornak, a village of several hundred souls in western Alaska a few
miles from the Bering Sea, Colas Inc.’s
subsidiary Colaska is building a new
airport. The site is essential to the daily
lives of the local population. “Like a lot
of small towns in Alaska, Chefornak is
in the middle of nowhere,” explains Ben
Northey, president of Colaska. “And
because there are very few roads given
the nature of the land, planes are the
main means of transport. The Alaska
Department of Transportation & Public
Facilities (AKDOT&PF) owns and
manages 256 rural airports across the
state. Air travel is a way of life in rural
Alaska, since 82% of Alaskan communities are not served by roads.
Chefornak needed a new airport with
a bigger runway to fly in more freight.”
Quality Asphalt Paving (QAP), a
Colaska subsidiary was asked to carry
out the $17.5 million project.
A project in several stages
Work started in January. Over a
three-month period,150,000 cubic
yards of material was blasted and
hauled to the Chefornak airport site.
> KEY FIGURES
CHEFORNAK
AIRPORT PROJECT
$17.5 million
contract value
150,000
cu. yard
of crushed aggregate
1,000-yard
long runway
20
men at the height
of the project
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AIR SUPPLIES
The inhabitants of Alaska
receive supplies primarily by
air. The state has 256 small
rural airports scattered around
its territory.
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ICE ROAD
The materials necessary
to build the new airport in
Chefornak were shipped in
winter via a temporary ice
road of 5.5 miles, crossing
the lakes and tundra,
and built specifically
for the worksite.
> KEY FIGURES
FOR THE
CHEFORNAK
TEMPORARY
ICE ROAD
5.5 miles
length of the ice road
built to carry materials
to the worksite
1,500,000
gallons
of water used to build
the ice road
This first phase called for considerable
organization in terms of logistics to
cope with the extreme geography and
weather. “The western part of the state
is covered by tundra, which is very wet
under the surface,” says Ben Northey.
“It’s impossible to travel over or to build
on, and much less to transport materials.”
To carry blasted rock from the quarry,
located 5.5 miles from the site at the
foot of Cheeching Mountain, it was
At the height of the project, around
“twenty
drivers, excavators and drillers
were involved, along with the site manager.
On days when there were snow storms,
they had to go back to camp.
”
necessary to build an ice road (see, p. 31)
last winter.
Phase 2, which started in spring
2011, consists in building the new
runway foundation on a subbase
almost one yard deep. It is scheduled
for completion this fall. In spring 2012,
when winter is over, the foundations
will be covered with a 12-inch crushed
aggregate surface course. Other work
in 2012 will include runway & taxiway
lighting and the construction of two
buildings to house snow-clearing
equipment.
Harsh winter
The QAP teams had to cope with
freezing temperatures and work in
extreme conditions throughout the
winter phase of the project – when
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CHRIS HUMPHREY
A QUESTION OF LOGISTICS
Chris Humphrey, 28, joined QAP in 2004. He started out in quality control,
in parallel with his studies, before being promoted to project engineer
in 2005. He particularly appreciates the company’s projects in western
Alaska: “Things are always unpredictable, and you never know what the
weather’s going to be like. It’s really motivating, especially in terms of
logistics. A project like the Chefornak airport is no exception to the rule.
A good 90% of the problem is logistical, with the remainder concerning
construction. You have to be very well organized and not forget anything.
The most complicated thing is getting everything to the site. Most of the
material is transported by barge in the summer, so at just one moment
in the year. If you forget something important and can’t get it shipped
by air, then you sometimes have to wait for the return of warm weather.”
they were not confined to their specially
built base camp during snow storms.
“These interruptions are obviously very
frustrating for the team, since they
don’t get to go home in the evening,”
says Ben Northey. “Most of the employees are local people, recruited by QAP
to work on the project. Usually they
only work during the summer, owing
to the climate. The project is a real
opportunity for QAP. By training locals,
it gains an experienced workforce for
future projects.”
Making airports a specialty
This type of airport project isn’t a
first for Colaska. Quite the opposite.
“We are often called on to build runways or handle maintenance. In general we manage three to five airport
jobs a season. We recently worked at
Fairbanks and Anchorage on contracts
worth $30 million each.”
QAP recently completed the second
phase of a project to rebuild and lengthen the runway of the international airport in Anchorage. The work also
included installing new runway lights
and ultra-sophisticated systems to
enhance plane approaches, as well as
renovating the water drainage system.
Colaska also brings its expertise in
airports to more modest projects, such
as the one in Yakutat, in southeastern
Alaska. Yakutat is located 200 miles
from the nearest town, with no mobile
phone network and just one monthly
link by waterway. During the summer,
Secon, another Colaska subsidiary,
renovated the runway of the local airport using the surfacing materials
reclaimed from the roads of the village,
and then renovated the roads. It also
developed a water drainage system.
> COLASKA KEY
FIGURES
# 1 in Alaska
heavy civil construction
company
110 to 900
employees depending
on the time of year
9 subsidiaries
Leadership in construction
Colaska is the leader in heavy civil
construction in Alaska, by reason of
its varied services: earthworks, production of aggregates, emulsions and
ready-mix, supporting structures in
reinforced concrete, road markings,
etc. “We are the only ones working all
over the state. The expertise of our
employees in quality control, project
engineering and logistics management is particularly renowned,” says
• AGGPRO
• Emulsion Products
• Exclusive Paving
• Juneau Asphalt
• Pacific Asphalt
• Pacific Asphalt
Services Co. (PASCO)
• Quality Asphalt
Paving (QAP)
• Secon
• University Redi-Mix
(URM)
TECHNIQUE
How do you build an ice road?
The recipe is simple in theory – mix plenty of water with ice shards and
snow – but complicated in practice. First of all the contour lines, relief,
climate and water availability have to be analyzed. This last factor is
essential and in the end determines the path of the road. Construction
also requires the prior authorization of the landowners and a number
of government agencies. And if the water in question contains fish,
the amount of useable water is reduced – or even completely forbidden.
Last, care must be taken during construction to ensure that the road
is thick enough to take the weight of the trucks and goods without
damaging the environment.
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ROAD LEADING TO THE NEW
AIRPORT IN CHEFORNAK
Another component of
the project was this road
made of crushed aggregate,
1 mile long and 13 feet
wide, between the village
of Chefornak and the other
towns and villages around the
new airport. Because of the
climate, it is not surfaced.
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Ben Northey, who adds: “They don’t
call Alaska the ‘last frontier’ for nothing. It means that there are still a great
deal of development opportunities,
particularly in the road network. The
last new road alignment dates back
to the 1970s! Increasingly, we are
seeing more preservation projects
versus reconstruction projects. New
markets will also be developed.”
Clearly, Colaska’s impressive references, which include the Chefornak
ice road, will continue to attract both
public and private customers in this
land of extremes! JON FUGLESTAD
MOTIVATION, TRAINING
AND EXPERIENCE
To quote Jon Fuglestad, vice-president of Colaska and general
manager of QAP, “Our main asset is our people and their professional
experience in tough conditions. Not to mention their motivation.
The Chefornak project is also very positive in terms of local hiring.
When you call on regional inhabitants, people hear about it quickly.
We have been successful in finding good workers to train in our
techniques and methods, which means we can hire them the next time
we may be in the area. Given the often difficult working conditions
we encounter, we appreciate being able to recruit people we know
and trust for our new projects, people we trained for previous projects.”
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34 itineraries
Foremen, drivers and project
managers… they all do
their jobs with enthusiasm and have
decided to share their daily routine
and projects with us.
>
“ Each new job is an adventure ”
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE DEUX
DEPUTY MANAGER
GAMMA MATERIALS LTD (GML)
MAURITIUS
Jean-Christophe Deux is a true
globetrotter. His travels began
at the Group in 1996, with
an internship as an engineering
student at the Blanchard quarries
in Martinique. The experience
confirmed his desire to work
outside of France. He did his
national service in Mauritius, again
with Colas, working on road
construction projects. Immediately
afterwards he was appointed
project engineer at Colas
Guadeloupe, then promoted
to sector supervisor in 2002.
“Each new job is a chance to make
progress,” he says. In 2004 he
became head of the Rabat profit
center in Morocco with GTR.
He then moved on to Reunion
Canada Great Britain
France
Switzerland
Martinique
Mauritius
Island, where he worked as agency
supervisor for Colas Reunion
Industries (CRI). He returned
to Mauritius on June 1, 2011
as deputy manager of Gamma
Materials Ltd, 50% owned by
Colas. The new job is a satisfying
challenge for Jean-Christophe,
a native of the Anjou region
and a firm believer in the mixing
of cultures. <
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“ Fantastic experiences through my job ”
BRANDI DAVEY
PROJECT MANAGER
COLAS LTD
GREAT BRITAIN
Brandi Davey, an engineering
school graduate, didn’t
particularly intend to work in
construction and public works.
“It happened by chance, when I
got a job at the Highways Agency*
in 2005. I liked it so much that I
did a Masters in construction
management. Then I started
working on airports for the
Defense Ministry,” she says.
She joined Colas Ltd, in 2009,
as project manager at the Airport
Infrastructure division. “It’s a really
interesting job, very varied, and I
get to travel,” she says. Brandi lived
on the Falklands from July 2010
to May 2011, working on the
Shackleton project to renovate
the military airbase on the islands
(see Routes issue 26, p. 20). “It
was a difficult project, especially
because we had to make sure
we didn’t disrupt life at the military
base or keep supply planes from
coming and going.” Brandi is now
back in Great Britain, managing
major projects for the Airport
Infrastructure division. She is
currently working on renovating
runway number one at
Manchester International Airport.
“I hope Colas Ltd will come up
with other fantastic opportunities
for me like this!” she exclaims.<
* National highway agency in Great Britain.
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“ Moving from tracks to QSE was a challenge!”
LAURENT VOLMAR
QSE OFFICER
COLAS RAIL
FRANCE
After working as a foreman
at Dassault, in 2004 Laurent
Volmar joined the urban
rail branch of Colas Rail
in Ollainville outside Paris, as a
rail fitter. His brother, a welder,
was already working for the
company. Laurent soon showed
what he was capable of. After
just six weeks, the head of the
center asked him to supervise
three employees working on
track maintenance on the tram
system in Caen, Normandy.
Two years later, after attending
a training program, Laurent
joined the team working on
the tram tracks in Le Mans.
2008 was a turning point in
his career: he became a QSE
(Quality, Safety, Environment)
Officer. With the support of
his branch manager, Laurent
underwent IT training and
learned his new responsibilities
on the job: monitoring the safety
targets and ensuring they
are applied, updating quality
procedures, inspecting lifting
equipment, supervising training
at the center, and raising
employee awareness of the
dangers of alcohol and drug
use on the job. He is also
still the reference person for
aluminothermic welding and
maintenance work for the
Caen tram system. With his
two hats, Laurent has first-hand
knowledge of site issues
and an ability to listen and
help others. <
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“ Transmitting expertise and interpersonal skills ”
GILLES PIERSON
PRODUCTION MANAGER
SACER PARIS-NORD-EST
FRANCE
Born into a family of farmers,
Gilles Pierson likes the open air.
This no doubt motivated his
decision to join the Sacer ParisNord-Est agency in Vesoul
in 1973, where he discovered
the world of public works.
He quickly rose through the
ranks, starting out as a worker
then carrying out technical
monitoring in a laboratory
before going on to take care
of the newly created sales
and production department for
structure waterproofing and
special products. He travelled
to Strasbourg and Grenoble,
then joined the construction side.
“I particularly liked the ten years
I spent as project manager,
a cross-disciplinary job with
a great deal of autonomy, like
running a company.” Gilles
then worked as an agency
supervisor for nine years,
before becoming production
manager for the east, a role
in which he is also entrusted
with cross-disciplinary functions,
as head of the internal training
and tutoring unit designed to
support young people arriving
at work sites in the Greater Paris
area. The objective is to sharpen
their curiosity and stir their
enthusiasm for the profession
so that they can build a career
as rich and fulfilling as Gilles’.
This task of transmitting
expertise and interpersonal skills
also corresponds to his passion
for field work and human
relations.<
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“ Walking the Way of Saint James ”
NANCY BASTIEN
ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT,
ACCOUNTING AND TAXES
COLASCANADA
CANADA
Nancy Bastien set herself
a challenge when she joined
ColasCanada as accounting
director back in 2004:
to prove herself in an essentially
masculine work environment.
Mission accomplished, it would
seem, since in July 2010 she
was promoted to Assistant Vice
President Accounting and Taxes,
managing four employees.
“We work with the vice-president
of finance, making sure that
accounting procedures are
respected, drawing up financial
statements, handling company
tax and preparing budgets.”
A happy member of the
ColasCanada team, she was
touched by the enthusiasm
shown by her management and
colleagues when she announced
her decision to walk the last
300 kilometers of the Saint
James’ Way to Santiago de
Compostela in Spain with a dozen
other Canadians. The sporting
achievement was organized to
raise money for the Canadian
Cancer Research Society. “It was
all about going beyond your limits
and also the result of my personal
development, especially since
I had joined forces with a good
cause.” The adventure took ten
days. “Walking eight hours a day
called for considerable physical
and spiritual strength. It’s a little
like our path through life.
It wasn’t always easy but I had
an extraordinary time.”<
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“ Long live internal mobility! ”
LAURENT BRUNO
WORKS MANAGER
SMAC SUD-EST
FRANCE
After obtaining his degree
in civil engineering and
infrastructure, Laurent Bruno
joined Colas in 2003. The rail
subsidiary Seco-Rail, today
Colas Rail, was recruiting young
talents at the time to support
its development. Laurent was
assigned to the Paris Major
Projects profit center.
He travelled around France
working on the modernization
of the railway network.
In 2004, he was appointed
to a position in Lyon. He liked
working on railways – the only
disadvantage was that he had
to move around a lot because
the projects required a
considerable level of technical
skill that has to be acquired
in the field. And what Laurent
wanted to do was settle down.
“I wanted to stay with the Group
whatever the subsidiary, since
each one is a leader in its
sector and gives you the
chance to work on major
projects.” So Colas proposed
that he joined the Smac works
office in Chalon-sur-Saône –
and change his activity from
railways to waterproofing. For
a year, Laurent worked on
the Cité Internationale project
in Lyon, before moving back
to his native Burgundy. Today
he works on sites in the
Saône-et-Loire département
in Burgundy. Thanks to internal
mobility, professional fulfilment
and personal development
now go hand in hand! <
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40 itineraries
“ Team management means a lot to me ”
ALFONSO CATARINO
PRODUCTION MANAGER
AXIMUM ELECTRONIC
PRODUCTS
FRANCE
Alfonso Catarino joined
the Colas Group when the
Urban Systems business
of Sagemcom joined
Aximum in June 2010. Before
Sagemcom, he was involved
in the rollout of optical fiber
and GSM in the 90s, and then
worked as product quality
engineer in the development
of a set-top box. At Aximum
Electronic Products, Alfonso
is production manager for
Urban Systems, supervising
the manufacture of electronic
equipment for cities, such
as traffic lights, traffic control
systems and automatic access
bollards. “Before, I managed
mass-produced products.
Products today are more
personalized, which makes
things more interesting.”
A fan of team sports, Alfonso
appreciates the emphasis
Aximum places on team
management. “At Sagemcom
my unit was just a small one
among many others. At Aximum
my expertise and that of
my team are unique in the
company and so considered far
more valuable.” A perfect recipe
for boosting performance! <
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“ I was able to return to full-time work ”
JOAO LUIS VIEIRA DA SILVA
MACHINE OPERATOR
COLAS SUISSE
SWITZERLAND
Joao Luis Vieira Da Silva
never gives up. In 2005, the
tendon in his right foot was
severed during a particularly
violent mugging. Despite
several operations he did not
regain full mobility and was
unable to return to his job
as a builder at Colas Genève.
Determined and an optimist
at heart, Joao Luis didn’t give
up and refused to opt for
disability insurance. This
determination convinced
his company, which, with
the help of SUVA, the Swiss
national accident insurance
office, gave Joao Luis the
chance to drive a dump truck
for two weeks to test his
abilities. He came through
with flying colors and received
all the assistance necessary
to pursue this line of work.
He took first-level machine
operator courses, got his license,
and then took another course
to be able to drive heavier
machines. “In April 2009,
after five operations and over
100 hours of physiotherapy
and re-education at home,
I returned to full-time work,”
Joao Luis says proudly.
This exemplary retraining
was made possible by
the combined efforts of SUVA
and Colas Suisse, but above
all by the courage of a
motivated employee.<
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“ Skilled workers pave the way forward ”
MARTIAL CHOUQUET
MULTI-VEHICLE OPERATOR
SCREG ILE-DE-FRANCE NORMANDIE
FRANCE
At Colas subsidiaries
in mainland France they are
called “Compagnons of the
Golden Diamond”. Sacer
companies refer to them as
“Top Level Compagnons”, Screg
subsidiaries as “Compagnons of
the Green Ribbon”*. The members
of the “Compagnons de la Route”
skilled workers guild at the Colas
Group share a common aim:
to help staff on a day-to-day basis
and feed back problems and best
practices alike. An essential role,
and one that Martial Chouquet took
on with pride in 2007. Martial joined
Screg Ile-de-France - Normandie
in 2004 as a machine operator.
Today he is a multi-vehicle driver
and boasts the ideal qualities of a
Compagnon de la Route: attentive,
exemplary and patient. “We act
as correspondents at sites, informing, listening, ensuring everyone’s
safety, and thinking about possible
improvements.” As vice-president
of the “Compagnons of the Green
Ribbon” at Screg Ile-de-France Normandie, he regularly meets
with the vice-presidents of the
Compagnon orders of the other
subsidiaries and agency heads
to discuss a range of issues.
Enthusiasm is at the heart of
the way Martial coordinates the
62 “Compagnons of the Green
Ribbon” at his subsidiary.<
* Aximum and Colas Belgium:
“Compagnons of the Golden Diamond”;
Smac: “Compagnons of the Arch”;
Spac: “Compagnons of the Arc”;
Colas Rail: “Compagnons of Rail”;
GTOI/Réunion: “Compagnons of the
Fournaise”; ColasCanada: “Compagnons
of North America”.
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itineraries 43
“ My experience has made me a versatile man ”
JEAN-CLAUDE VICTOR
QUARRY INSTALLATION
COORDINATOR
BLANCHARD
MARTINIQUE
Jean-Claude Victor is a
self-made man. Having joined
Blanchard in Martinique as
a worker in 1972, he is now
the oldest employee at a quarry
that produces and sells
200,000 metric tons of eruptive
rock a year. After nearly
40 years’ experience, the
Croix Rivail quarry in Ducos
holds no secrets for Jean-Claude.
Self-taught, he has acquired
impressive expertise over the
years, gleaned from his handson experience in the field. His
know-how – covering everything
from welding to electricity –
is so varied that the managers
who trained him in the past
now come to him for advice!
Today Jean-Claude is in charge
of installation. He maintains
machines, handles crushers
with disconcerting dexterity
and knows the equipment like
the back of his hand. So what
motivates him? “I make sure
the equipment works perfectly.
That way we can meet
production deadlines and ensure
the safety of all staff.” Even
though Jean-Claude has been
assisted by a two-person team
for 18 years, he will be sorely
missed at the site when he
retires in two years’ time.<
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44 special report
Tramways:
multimodal know-how
Trams are once again a feature of the French cityscape,
giving the road, rail and signaling subsidiaries of Colas
an opportunity to utilize their know-know in public transport
infrastructure and urban development. That multimodal expertise
is in demand in France and around the world.
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ngers, June 25, 2011. The
“rainbow” tram, so called
for the colors of its cars,
today made its inaugural journey.
Colas Rail worked on the entire line,
12.3 km long and dotted with
25 stations, while Sacer Atlantique,
Screg Ouest and Colas Centre-Ouest
handled infrastructure for a 3.2-km
section including seven stations and a
park-and-ride facility.
One month earlier, in Tours, a model
of the future tramway, with a design
scheme by artist Daniel Buren, was
revealed to the public at a town fair.
Work began in July 2010 and the
A
service is scheduled to come into service
in autumn 2013. Colas Centre-Ouest,
Screg Ouest and Sacer Atlantique are
building the parking lots at Tranchée and
the bridge over the Cher, Colas Rail is
installing the catenaries and strongcurrent equipment and Aximum the
track signing.
Colas Rail, Sacer
Atlantique, Screg Ouest
and Colas Centre-Ouest
made an active
contribution to the
construction of the
infrastructure for the
Angers tram, together
with additional installations.
Trams make a comeback
Tours, Dijon, Paris (T3, T2, T7),
Lyon, Le Havre, Casablanca… orders
for tramways keep flowing in to Colas
subsidiaries. Tram systems are back
in fashion, especially in France. Trams
disappeared from French cities in
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46 special report
> TRAM SYSTEMS
IN FRANCE
21
cities have an operating
tramway system
20
projects to build or extend
tram lines before the end of
2013 in: Aubagne, Besançon,
Béthune, Bordeaux, Lyon,
Marseille, Nantes, Nîmes,
Toulouse and Tours
9
projects pending* in:
Annemasse, Avignon,
Bordeaux, Montpellier,
Saint-Louis, Strasbourg
and the Ain département
tramway
* the subsidies will be confirmed
within 18 months, on condition of
presenting a schedule demonstrating
the start of construction before
the end of 2013.
the 1960s (only Lille, Marseille and
Saint-Etienne kept their networks).
They reappeared in the 1980s in
Nantes and Grenoble, encouraged
by a new decentralization policy.
Heightened concern for the environment
in the 1990s and an interest in
combining town planning and transport
in the 2000s spurred city governments’
enthusiasm for trams. And tram systems
have a bright future ahead of them. In
a second call for bids as part of the
Grenelle program for the environment,
the French state is investing 315 million
euros in 29 projects to build or extend
tram systems (152 km of track), on
condition that work starts before the
end of 2013.
Numerous projects ahead
“Since the trams in Nantes and
Grenoble – the first ones we worked
on – the Group has been involved in
almost all the tram projects in France”,
explains Jean-Paul Brossard, deputy
managing director of roads in France
at Colas. “Our road, rail and signing
and signaling subsidiaries work on
streets, platforms, track installation,
signs and signals. What with building,
extending and maintaining lines,
business is booming.” Jean Perez,
head of sales at Colas MidiMéditerranée, adds, “Under the French
Grenelle environment program, a lot
of projects will be launched between
THE TRAM IN REIMS:
A CONCESSION OPERATION
Since April 2011, the tramway in Reims has been running its colored
trams between the district of Orgeval in the north of the city and the
Champagne-Ardenne high-speed train station in Bezannes in the
south-west. Members of the construction consortium – Colas Est,
Screg Est and Colas Rail – were actively involved in the project.
But the Group’s involvement is not over yet! The Reims tram is
a rare example of a French tram system operated as a concession
(to finance, design, build, operate and maintain). Colas is a shareholder
in the concession company, Mobilité Agglomération Rémoise (MARS),
which financed the construction of the tram system and will operate
the network for 30 years. Like the other shareholders, the Group
receives operating revenues and has a license to operate
the line as well as the bus network.
now and the end of 2013. Things will
probably be slow in 2014, when local
elections are held. But investment
should pick up again after that.” For
many years, only cities with more than
300,000 people considered tramways,
because of the cost (between 25 and
30 million euros per kilometer, which
is an average of 300 million euros for
one line). Now even medium-sized
towns are interested in trams.
“Besançon, Avignon and Aubagne are
investing in tram systems, but on a
smaller scale,” explains Jean Perez.
They are opting for shorter trams (23
meters as opposed to 40 meters for
a standard tram), which are less
expensive (15 million to 17 million
euros per kilometer) and require less
extensive infrastructure.”
Ongoing dialogue with local
residents
Regardless of their size, tram
projects are fairly complex. They require
major development studies with
detailed knowledge of the subsoil and
all existing underground cables and
pipelines, and extremely accurate
scheduling to be able to deliver the
project by the deadline, ensure safety
and keep inconvenience to neighboring
residents to a minimum. “On average,
it takes about three years to build a
tram system. In other words, the
construction work impacts the lives of
local residents and businesses for a
long time. It’s our responsibility to
minimize that impact and maintain
ongoing dialogue with residents,”
explains Jean-Paul Brossard. “For
every site, we appoint a ‘facilitator’ to
be the contact person for residents
and to watch over safety issues.” One
of the difficulties with this kind of
project is the narrowness of the
construction site. The construction
companies have to work around
pedestrians and cars in the six-meterwide structural clearance of the tram
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special report 47
line. “Working in such a tight space is
also a challenge when you have to
accommodate other trades: you have
to be very flexible,” adds Hervé Le Joliff,
head of the rail equipment and urban
railway division at Colas Rail. To
facilitate work, Aximum designed the
Axibloc, the slimmest concrete
temporary separation barrier on the
market. “During construction, we install
and maintain traffic signing for the
whole site, and manage traffic flows on
the adjoining roads,” explains Philippe
Harelle, head of industries at Aximum.
“What’s more, with 50% of the fleet of
three-color intersection traffic control
devices in France, we are systematically
involved in the final management of
road/tram intersections.”
High synergy project
The Group’s subsidiaries work
together on most of the tram projects:
the Colas, Screg and Sacer road
subsidiaries build the platforms and
infrastructure; Colas Rail lays the tracks
and overhead lines, the strong-current
(electric substations) or weak-current
installations and signals; Aximum
handles road signage and traffic
As part of the construction
of the tram system
in Reims, Colas Est,
Screg Est and Colas Rail
built a lot of additional
infrastructure, like
this cycle path.
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48 special report
GTR, a Colas subsidiary
in Morocco, and Colas Rail
built the two Rabat-Salé
tram lines, which went into
operation in May this year.
control. “Clients appreciate the
Group’s professionalism and ability to
keep to deadlines because of its
substantial human and material
resources,” explains Hervé Le Joliff.
“We are recognized by local
governments for our know-know in
urban infrastructure,” adds Jean Perez.
“Because we have entities all over
France and are therefore close to all
the cities likely to build a tram system
or extend their existing network, we
practically cover the market.”
The Group’s know-how in tram
systems is also in demand internationally.
In Morocco, for example, after the
Rabat tram built by GTR and Colas Rail,
the consortium of the subsidiaries
Colas Rail, LRM, GTR and Urbis
Signalétique won the contract for the
second section of the Casablanca tram
network, covering 9 km of tracks (see
article p. 23). In Romania, the rail
subsidiary Colas Rail Romania was
involved a few years ago in the upgrade
of two tram lines in Bucharest. In
Belgium, the road subsidiary Colas
Belgium was involved in moving two
tram lines in Ostend. And in Switzerland,
Colas Geneva is working for the fourth
time on the Geneva tram network,
where it is managing a highly technical
project: the installation of 1,300 meters
of two-way track. These projects, plus
the French ones, are solid references
for future bids for Bordeaux, Grenoble,
Besançon, Nice and cities in other
parts of the world.<
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COLAS GENEVA DOES IT AGAIN
The Colas Suisse subsidiary
is working on the Geneva tram
system for the fourth time,
to install 1,300 meters
of two-way tracks.
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50 crossroads
Human resources
50 > Disability: Colas steps up its commitment
Environment
52 > Well-oiled waste management
53 > The quarries are buzzing...
Equipment
54 > Ten good ideas win e-nov awards
55 > Concrete on demand with the mobile mixer
56 > Moving to the beat of a new RAP drum!
HUMAN
RESOURCES
Subsidiary life
57 > Cosson: a new green-building head office
New contracts
58 > Aximum wins contract to monitor
railway crossings
Techniques
59 > Road-marking products set for certification
Disability: Colas steps up its commitment
On May 27, 2011, the Colas Group
announced the next stage in its
commitment to disabled people. At an event
attended by the 23 vice-chairmen of the Ordre des
Compagnons de la Route skilled workers’ guild,
Philippe Tournier, Human Resources Manager at
Colas, and Pierre Blanc, Managing Director of
Agefiph*, signed a two-year agreement applicable
to all subsidiaries in mainland France. The agreement
sets out a number of initiatives to assist employees
facing permanent or temporary disability.
A long-term approach
The idea for this agreement first took shape at
the end of 2009, as Antoine Cristau, head of
diversity at Colas, explains: “Exemplary initiatives
have existed at a local level for some time, but the
subject of disability was rarely addressed in a
systematic, concerted manner. To remedy this, and
to obtain a snapshot of the current situation, we
decided at the end of 2009 to join forces with
Agefiph to carry out a diagnostic and consultancy
survey of all the subsidiaries concerned in mainland
France. Using this snapshot, we were able to
identify the main barriers and levers, and establish
the action plans to be implemented.” The content
of the Group agreement is based on the various
diagnoses established in 2010. Any subsidiaries
that so wish may sign a complementary local
agreement.
Precise commitments
This agreement illustrates the active efforts of
Colas to increase the employment of disabled
people, by taking account of their situation more
effectively. And because it is essential to deliver
practical results, the Group has made a number of
commitments in the area of job retention (modifying
job descriptions, looking for internal or external
redeployment solutions in the event of incapacity
or disability, promoting recognition, protecting
disabled workers from being laid off, etc.), integrating
disabled employees (120 in two years, all types of
contracts), or developing purchasing with the
disabled sector.
Initiatives conducted simultaneously
“To meet this objective and respect our
commitments, we need to change the way people
think, the way they look at the disability issue,”
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crossroads 51
In the presence of the 23 vice-presidents of the Ordre des Compagnons de la Route, Philippe Tournier, Human Resources
Manager at Colas, and Pierre Blanc, Managing Director of Agefiph, signed an agreement on disabilities.
points out Philippe Tournier. “Changing mindsets
is particularly important when you look at the
statistics,” continues Antoine Cristau. “Figures
clearly show that one person in every two will face
disability at some point in their lives. Also, in
companies, 80% of disabilities are invisible, but
that does not mean they do not exist.”
Almost 500 managers will receive training to
give them a greater understanding of disability and
help them review the various situations possible.
A special guide will also be published for managers.
And a range of awareness-raising tools will be
deployed for all employees: a poster campaign, a
film, a booklet on how to ensure that disability is
recognized, etc. For Philippe Tournier, “we will be
able to globally measure the positive impact of
these first initiatives by 2013, via the percentage
of disabled people employed directly or indirectly
by the Group. We are aiming to increase this figure
from 2.12% to 3.5% by the end of the period
covered by the agreement. Looking beyond figures,
it is essential for disability to be addressed more
effectively by all our business units. <
* Association de gestion du fonds pour l’insertion professionnelle des
personnes handicapées (Fund for the employment of the disabled).
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52 crossroads
Used motor oil, like the oil recovered here at the SNPR Sylvain Joyeux profit center of Colas Ile-de-France - Normandie,
is used as recycled oil or fuel. In the United States, it is used as fuel by asphalt plants.
ENVIRONMENT
Well-oiled waste management
To better monitor its responsible
development efforts, Colas has
introduced various performance indicators, one
of which is dedicated to waste management. Since
adding up the different types of waste was not a useful
measurement, the Group decided to focus on one type
of waste in particular, strongly linked to its business and
considered one of the most polluting: used motor oil.
According to Ademe*, a single liter of used oil dumped
into the environment can make 10,000 liters of potable
water unsafe to drink. The indicator introduced by Colas
is based on the recovery rate, which is the difference in
quantity between oil purchased and oil disposed of
responsibly. The indicator, designed in 2009, is reliable,
based on information transmitted via ExtraFi, the Group’s
software. In 2010 the recovery rate was 56% worldwide
and 69% in mainland France. In France, companies are
required by law to dispose of their waste motor oil free
of charge at approved centers. The short-term aim?
A recovery rate of 75%, bearing in mind that a percentage
of the oil cannot be recovered because it has been
burned by the engines. <
* French Environment and Energy Management Agency.
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crossroads 53
To fight against the disappearance of bees, hives have been installed at Echangeur Nantes and in six quarries
in the west of France. Many more to come in the future!
ENVIRONMENT
The quarries are buzzing…
The idea of installing beehives at
the 20 quarries operated by the
Materials Division of Colas Centre-Ouest, Screg
Ouest and Sacer Atlantique came from Stéphane
Durand-Guyomard, who joined the Group in 2010 as
land and environment manager for the Colas quarries
in the Brittany and Pays de la Loire regions. “I wanted
to help beekeepers and prove that quarries, which are
often wrongly accused of destroying the environment,
can provide a habitat for a wide variety of protected
species, like wall lizards and sand martins.” The first
beehives were set up at the Echangeur Nantes
headquarters and in 6 quarries. At a presentation to
the quarries’ local information committee meetings, the
initiative was warmly welcomed, especially as it has
already started to bear “fruit”: jars of honey were given
to committee members! Henri Molleron, Head of
Environment at Colas, has decided, with the approval
of senior management, to extend the operation to the
Group’s other sites in France and around the world,
with the motto: “A protected species or a beehive in
every quarry.” <
* Meetings are held once a year, for each quarry,
with local residents and politicians.
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54 crossroads
These protective screens, which won an award in the e-nov competition, were developed by Jean-Luc Fargier, superintendent
at Colas Rail, to protect workers in tunnels from trains while providing them with air, water and light.
EQUIPMENT
10 good ideas win e-nov awards
The results for the internal e-nov
2008-2010 competition are in!
Some 143 projects from nine countries were initially
shortlisted. 46 of these were selected to be
presented to the jury, which awarded two employees
per prize, with five prizes on offer. The special jury
award went to Jean-Luc Fargier, superintendent at
Colas Rail’s RTS profit center, for his eminently
relevant innovations. “I began to work on sites at
the age of 15, in extremely tough conditions, which
are responsible for my state of health today. This
is why I’m always looking for ideas to improve the
safety of employees and make their everyday lives
easier! For example, I came up with the idea for
protective screens for employees working in tunnels,
to protect them from trains while supplying them
with air, water and light.” Bruno Morel, deputy head
of equipment at Colas, was delighted with the quality
of the innovations: “I am convinced that this approach
is an effective way for disseminating best Group
practices”. Go to the Colas intranet site to check out
the winning innovations and www.e-nov.colas.com
to sign up for the new, 2011-2013 session. <
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crossroads 55
The ultra-mobile mixer at Colas Est’s Meurthe-et-Moselle profit center produces fresh concrete on demand in complete
autonomy – and at optimized cost.
EQUIPMENT
Concrete on demand with the mobile mixer
How do you produce up to 60 m3
of fresh concrete an hour on site?
By using an ultra-mobile mixer. Colas Est’s Meurtheet-Moselle profit center acquired one last year and
has since been reaping all the benefits. The machine
can make concrete or surface preparation with two
aggregate sizes, as well as cement-bound
aggregates, self-compacting concrete and storable
mixes, all directly on site. The truck is equipped with
a water tank, two aggregate hopper feeders, a
cement hopper, an extra bin for mixing cement or
other powders, three tanks for additives (retarding
and accelerating agents) and coloring agents, plus
a system for adding fibers. For autonomous on-site
loading, the mixer is also fitted with a crane. The
control station, with a built-in computer and printer,
is located at the rear of the vehicle. Today some
20 teams use this equipment. So what are the
advantages? Autonomy, ease, flexibility, quantity
control, choice of materials, the guarantee of having
fresh concrete, and optimized costs. All in all, a very
sound investment!<
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56 crossroads
SARM has a new plant that can make asphalt mixes from reclaimed asphalt pavement. The RAP content can now
reach up to 70%.
EQUIPMENT
Moving to the beat of a new RAP drum!
In October 2010, Société Alsacienne
de Recyclage de Matériaux
(SARM), co-owned by Screg Est and Colas Est,
acquired a new-generation asphalt plant that can
produce mixes with a high reclaimed asphalt
pavement (RAP) content. The new stationary plant
is a useful addition to the site, which has collected
and reprocessed waste from projects in the
Strasbourg region since 1988. SARM can now
manufacture new mixes made from reclaimed road
surfacing. The plant has two drums: one for
aggregate from quarries, and one for RAP from old
roads recovered on jobsites. The mixes it produces
can boast RAP contents of up to 70%! Another
feature of this innovative plant is that it manufactures
warm mixes at 110°C, and can produce an alternative
foam bitumen-based products using a technique
that adds water. This cutting-edge equipment has a
production capacity of 300 metric tons an hour and
an eco-design that cuts greenhouse gas emissions.
The plant’s burners run on natural gas and all
combustion gases are retreated directly by the plant.
In addition, fines produced by the drums are
collected. <
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crossroads 57
The new head office of Cosson, a subsidiary of Screg Ile-de-France - Normandie, in Louvres is green-building certified.
Facilities connected to company activity include a new waste collection center for professionals.
SUBSIDIARY
LIFE
Cosson: a new green-building head office
After more than 40 years at Roissyen-France near the Paris Charlesde-Gaulle airport, Cosson, a subsidiary of Screg Ilede-France - Normandie, inaugurated its new head
office in the town of Louvres, near Paris in June. The
350 guests (customers, local government, employees)
invited to the event took part in a range of activities,
including a visit of the new site. The new head office,
in compliance with French green-building standard,
HQE®, located in the Val d’Oise département, is
certified. The facilities connected to the company’s
activities – such as a waste collection center for
professionals – use innovative technologies that
reflect Cosson’s long-standing commitment to the
environment. Examples of the company’s priority focus
on responsible development include: office heating
and climate control combining electricity and
geothermal energy with continuous consumption
monitoring; a materials negotiation platform favoring
recycled rainwater run-off and electric-powered
machines; and a washing facility with a 90% water
recycle rate. Cosson’s very first site was located in
Louvres. This, then, is a return to the company’s roots
– with a contemporary slant ! <
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58 crossroads
Aximum has won a contract to monitor railway crossings across France. The Electronic Products unit will design
the monitoring equipment and Aximum Services will conduct the preliminary studies.
NEW
CONTRACTS
Aximum wins contract to monitor railway crossings
France’s Ministry of Ecology,
Sust ainable Development,
Transport and Housing has awarded Aximum
a 24-month renewable contract to monitor
vehicles at railway crossings throughout France.
A ten-person project team was involved in preparing
the bid. Aximum Electronic Products will design the
monitoring equipment, and Aximum Services will
conduct the preliminary studies. A total of between
50 and 100 cameras will be installed each year.
The cameras will photograph any vehicle that fails
to stop when the warning light flashes to indicate
that a train is coming. The images will be sent to
the national traffic offenses processing center in
Rennes, where police officers will issue fines after
checking the information. A coordination unit of ten
people, based in Bordeaux and assisted by three
regional coordinators, will monitor implementation.
The new contract, which complements the existing
contract for automated monitoring of red lights,
consolidates Aximum’s positioning in automated
monitoring systems, a highly demanding sector in
terms of technical skills. <
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crossroads 59
Two new road marking products, Safesigne®, Titanium free and Vegesigne®, boasting strong environmental, health
and safety performance, are currently being certified on a section of Route RN2.
TECHNIQUES
Road marking products set for certification
With each new year, Colas develops
ever more efficient road marking
products in terms of environmental respect, reduced
risk for road workers, as well as improved safety
for motorists, day and night. Vegemark®, certified
in 2010, is a water-based paint made from
oleaginous raw materials, designed to help reduce
greenhouse gas emissions. Two new products are
currently being tested on a section of Route RN2,
a French road site used for certifying road marking
products. Safesigne®, Titanium free is a particularly
innovative product. As its name indicates, it contains
no titanium, a metal commonly used to make road
marking paints brilliantly white. Eliminating this
component protects resources and reduces
production costs. Vegesigne®, the latest addition to
the range, developed by the Group’s Campus for
Science and Techniques, contains no volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) or volatile solvents. Naturally,
these products also maintain and even enhance
retro-reflection performance, i. e. visibility, and the
skid resistance of conventional marking products.<
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60 in the picture
Meetings, films, awards, signings,
sports and cultural events…
Here are a few images of Group events
in France and around the world.
>
SIGNING THE
MAURITIAN PRESIDENT’S
VISITORS’ BOOK
When he visited Mauritius
Island, Hervé Le Bouc,
chairman and CEO of Colas,
was invited to sign the
President’s visitors’ book,
in honor of the ties between
Colas and Mauritius.
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in the picture 61
CANADA: 10TH ICE HOCKEY TOURNAMENT
Wapiti Gravel Suppliers has won ColasCanada’s 10th ice hockey
tournament. The competition brought together 180 employees
of the western Canadian subsidiaries.
“ON THE ROAD TO SCHOOL” IN VIETNAM
The Center for Street Children at 130 Chi Lang was renovated
with support from Colas Life. Romain Termoz, head of Colas
Vietnam, donated equipment and bicycles to the center.
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62 in the picture
COLAS
SUPPORTS
“DESH”, AKRAM
KHAN’S NEW
PRODUCTION
As part of
Colas on Stage,
Hervé Le Bouc,
chairman and CEO
of Colas, signed
a new sponsorship
contract with
the Akram Khan
Dance Company
in May this year.
Pictured here
with dancer,
choreographer
and the
company’s artistic
director Akram
Khan (left) and
producer Farooq
Chaudhry (right).
COLASCANADA:
OPENING OF
GECAN LAB
The Western
Canadian
subsidiaries’
new laboratory,
GECAN, was
opened in
Acheson (Alberta)
in June. The lab
employs about
ten engineers
and technicians
and will centralize
and disseminate
technical
know-how.
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in the picture 63
UNITED
STATES:
OPENING OF
CINCINNATI
LAB
A center for
technologies,
products and
processes
for Colas Inc.,
the Colas
Solutions
Technology Center
was opened
in early June
in Cincinnati, Ohio.
SCREG IDFN
COMING SOON
TO A SCREEN
NEAR YOU
In March,
the crew from
Kad Merad’s
first feature film,
Monsieur Papa,
starring Michèle
Laroque as a
construction
company boss,
spent a morning
shooting on
location at a site
run by the teams
from Screg IDFN
in Gennevilliers.
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64 in the picture
SECURITY CHALLENGE FRANCE
In March, Hervé Le Bouc awarded the prestigious Pivert Cristal
France trophy (above) to Thierry Caussemille, president of
Colas Sud-Ouest, which scored the highest security rating
in 2010. The prize for best improvement was awarded
to Colas Ile-de-France - Normandie, represented
by its president, Jean-Paul Brossard (below).
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in the picture 65
A GOOD TERN DESERVES AN AWARD…
For its support with protecting terns in Aquitaine, the Layrac
gravel pit operated by Screg Sud-Ouest was congratulated
at an environmental awards ceremony.
FRENCH PRESIDENT VISITS THE A29 MOTORWAY SITE
The French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, visited the construction site
of the A29 motorway run by two Colas subsidiaries as part of the
preparatory work for the Seine-Northern Europe Canal (see p. 9).
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66 in the picture
A PAINTING
OF THE “TOUR
DE FRANCE
SCREG”
When they met
in Arcachon
in June, the
young engineers
from the Screg
subsidiaries did
a Matisse-style
mural of the
highlights
of their version
of their “Tour
de France”.
COAST TO
COAST ON
AN ELECTRIC
SCOOTER
Colas sponsored
Benjamin Voron,
who rode across
America from
New York to
Los Angeles
on an electric
scooter. Zero
carbon emissions,
zero pollution!
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in the picture 67
COLAS
SCIENTIFIC
CONFERENCES
In June,
on Colas’ Campus
for Science and
Techniques, Paul
Colonna (research
supervisor
at INRA, France’s
agronomic
research institute
and scientific
advisor on
sustainable
development)
and Jean-François
Rous (head
of innovation
at Sofiprotéol)
took part in a
conference on the
theme
of bioenergy
and the green
chemistry of
renewable carbon.
ANNUAL
MEETING
OF THE
COMPAGNONS
DE LA ROUTE
On May 27, the
vice-presidents
of the French,
Belgian, Canadian
and Reunion
Island chapters of
the Compagnons
de la Route
skilled workers
guild met at the
Group’s corporate
headquarters
for their annual
gathering.
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“ON THE ROAD TO SCHOOL”
Supported by Colas through
Colas Life, the Kekeli Center
in Lomé (Togo) helps children
who work at Hanoukopé
market find the road to school
again (see p. 74).
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Horizons 69
70 intersections
Cercle Colas
Pierre Terzian
“Energy savings and solar power are
the best alternative energy sources.”
Colas Life
Yann Arthus-Bertrand
“Thanks to the mobilization of Colas
employees, the ‘On the Road to School’
program will achieve the momentum
it deserves.”
74 sponsorship
Colas Life
Togo:
a new country for the “On the Road
to School” program
Local initiatives
Lengguru:
Indonesia’s treasure trove of biodiversity
Colas Foundation
Piotr Klemensiewicz
“I like art to have a real function instead
of being locked away in a vault.”
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70 intersections
Pierre Terzian has a PhD
in economic sciences.
He taught petroleum
economics at the
University of Grenoble,
before founding
Pétrostratégies,
a petroleum consultancy
and publishing firm,
in 1985. Pierre Terzian
is the author of several
books: Prix et contrats
pétroliers dans les
pays arabes et en Iran
(1982), Organization
of Petroleum Exporting
Countries: The Inside
Story (1983) and Gaz
naturel : perspectives
2010-2020 (1998).
Pierre Terzian
“Energy savings and solar power are the best
alternative energy sources.”
specialist in the economics of the oil
and gas industry, Pierre Terzian shared
his expert knowledge of the energy
situation at the Cercle Colas. His presentation
focused on oil but addressed alternative energy
sources, too.
A
How would you describe the current global
energy situation, particularly with regard to oil?
Pierre Terzian: On the global energy scene, OECD
countries* account for almost half of total consumption.
They are the biggest consumers of all sources of
energy except coal, which is consumed chiefly by Asia.
In terms of reserves, the OPEC countries control twothirds of conventional oil and are also number-one for
conventional gas. Despite much talk in recent years,
peak oil for reserves is a fallacy, even if production is
limited. In fact, world reserves have never been so
abundant: they are estimated at 50 years for oil, 65
years for gas and a century-and-a-half for coal.
Countries have never been as dependent on oil and
gas exports and imports as now, which explains the
obsession with controlling sea and land routes given
current political, human and environmental risks.
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CERCLE COLAS
In this environment, what is the energy outlook?
P. T.: It is very difficult to make predictions about
energy because so many factors are involved.
Disruptions to supply and demand can occur at any
time. Political developments can have an impact,
such as when governments decide to stimulate their
economies through consumption. The involvement
of financial actors in oil markets makes them more
volatile. And there are accidents, like the disaster
in Fukushima, which will have significant long-term
consequences for nuclear energy and an indirect
impact on the development of other energy sources.
Technological progress obviously plays a major role.
This includes techniques to extract unconventional
oil and gas** and deepwater oil, even if production
models are still very costly. Given these factors,
predicting the world’s energy future is not an easy
exercise. What is clear, however, is that the picture
is changing.
What changes lie ahead for oil?
P. T.: Oil consumption is growing more slowly in
OECD countries than in the rest of the world,
particularly the major emerging countries. Similarly,
oil reserves, which are highly concentrated since
five countries in the Persian Gulf – Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Iran and Kuwait –
hold 60% of them, are also located in countries
with unconventional oil, such as Canada and
Venezuela. Oil production is less concentrated
geographically than oil reserves. For example, the
Middle East produces just twice as much as North
America, the birthplace of the oil industry in the
19th century, which gives some idea of the potential
there.
intersections 71
could fuel a bubble of surplus supply. However,
there are various obstacles to shale gas extraction
– costly upstream investment, the significant
environmental impact of current techniques, and
acceptability by the population.
What about other options? What energy
sources do you think we should concentrate
on?
P. T.: The world is becoming increasingly aware of
the need to preserve the environment. Many options
are being explored, such as wind power and
geothermal energy. But these solutions have
disadvantages or limits. Personally, I see only two
credible alternative energy sources for the very long
term: energy savings and solar power. Solar energy
reserves will last four-and-a-half billion years, which
is the estimated lifespan of our great star! *The 34 OECD member countries are: Australia, Austria, Belgium,
Canada, Chile, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Iceland, Israel, Italy,
Japan, Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United
States.
** Oil or gas produced or extracted using techniques other than
the conventional (oil-well) method, i.e. from oil sands, shale, etc..
What about natural gas?
P. T.: Natural gas is the energy source most in
demand. Even before the Fukushima disaster, world
gas demand was rising sharply. Unlike oil, which
sometimes goes through periods of stagnation, gas
consumption is increasing almost everywhere.
Driven by technological progress, the nonconventional gas revolution is underway. Shale gas
reserves are enormous and are altering the ranking
of gas-exporting countries, currently topped by
Russia and Qatar. Algeria has rich reserves and the
United States could become an exporter. Europe
and Asia might also be tempted by shale gas, which
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72 intersections
Yann Arthus-Bertrand is
a photographer, reporter,
documentary maker and
environmentalist. He is
chairman of the
GoodPlanet Foundation,
which he set up in 2005.
Two highlights in his
career have helped raise
broader environmental
awareness: the release
of his book The Earth
from the Air in 1999,
and ten years later, his
documentary Home,
watched by an estimated
400 million people.
Yann Arthus-Bertrand
“Thanks to the mobilization of Colas employees,
the ‘On the Road to School’ program will achieve the
momentum it deserves.”
cclaimed photographer and committed
environmentalist Yann Arthus-Bertrand
is a partner of “On the Road to School”
through his GoodPlanet Foundation. We talked
to him about this Colas Life program,
environmentalism and corporate sponsorship.
A
In your book The Earth from the Air, there
are some photos of roads among the many
images of natural landscapes. What made
you take these pictures of roads?
Yann Arthus-Bertrand: The advantage of aerial
photography is that it shows the way people live. I
don’t photograph roads for their own sake. A road
is part of the landscape and the image. A freeway
interchange, for example, shows the rapid pace of
urbanization. The sinuous line of a road is interesting
esthetically, too.
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COLAS LIFE
What does a road evoke for you?
Y. A.-B.: A road connects people and brings progress.
One of the people in the film 6 Billion Others (see
inset) said that thanks to the road, the people in his
village could get to hospital and save sick children.
At the same time, some parts of the planet should
not have roads to leave nature unspoiled.
Have your views of the environment
changed since you first got involved?
Y. A.-B.: Yes, I think my views have broadened.
Nature is my first passion, but now I’m also involved
with people. You can’t have nature on one side and
people on the other. They’re interconnected. For
me environmentalism is humanism.
What do you think of the increasing political
importance of environmentalism?
Y. A.-B.: I think it’s a good thing. Environmental
issues should have more prominence in politics. We
need to move beyond party divides and rivalry.
Environmentalism should be a part of any political
platform. The Grenelle environment program is a
good example of cooperation on environmental
issues, which have now become central.
Where does the GoodPlanet Foundation fit in?
Y. A.-B.: My travels and meetings have made me
realize that we have reached a crisis, one we need
to respond to by getting as many people as we can
involved in environmental issues, through information
and education. The GoodPlanet Foundation wants
to contribute to that dynamic.
intersections 73
Colas will be a happy company.”
Y. A.-B.: Social engagement does make people
happy; it’s very rewarding. Getting employees
involved in a good cause with strong values
strengthens motivation. And it’s thanks to the
involvement of employees and their interest in the
program that it will achieve the momentum it
deserves.
What do you think of corporate sponsorship
in general?
Y. A.-B.: A company involved in sponsorship is more
aware of key sustainable development issues and
incorporates ethical, social and environmental
concerns into its business practices. Sponsorship
has also become crucial: it supports NGOs, whose
action is vital for some population groups.
I encourage all companies to become engaged
sponsors.
What are GoodPlanet upcoming
commitments and actions?
Y. A.-B.: There are several projects underway. I am
working on the sequel to Home, which will be called
Human. We’re also going to make a film about
oceans. We plan to open a vacation center for young
people to raise their awareness of the environment.
It will be called House of Change. GOODPLANET FOUNDATION
Your foundation is a partner of “On the Road
to School”. What do you think of the
program? And Colas’ involvement?
Y. A.-B.: The “On the Road to School” program aims
to get more children into education, which is the
second Millennium Development Goal, which 189
countries are committed to achieving by 2015. A
great deal of work still needs to be done and this
program is vital. On behalf of Colas, GoodPlanet
identifies and runs projects that facilitate access
to education. We also try to work on related
environmental issues.
In the “On the Road to School” presentation
video, you say, “Engagement makes people
happy. People at Colas will be happy and
AN AIM: RAISE AWARENESS
OF THE ENVIRONMENT
GoodPlanet is involved in informing the general public
about environmental issues through the GoodPlanet.Info
website, books on major environmental issues, posters
distributed free of charge to schools, and photographic
exhibitions on the beauty and diversity of nature.
In 2009, the foundation launched the 6 Billion Others
project. In this documentary, 5,000 people around the
world answer 40 questions about life, death, dreams,
transmission, and other ideas. GoodPlanet is also involved
in carbon offsetting programs. In 2010 the foundation
launched a campaign to get businesses to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions by 10%. So far 200 local
governments and 300 companies have signed the 10:10
campaign.
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74 sponsorship
Togo: a new country
for the “On the Road to School” program
Set up by Colas Life, the group’s corporate
solidarity platform, “On the Road to School”,
is continuing its work to support children’s access
to education. After Vietnam, the program is now active
in Togo, at the Kekeli Center in Lomé.
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COLAS LIFE
ocated in an old quarter of Lomé, the
capital of Togo, Hanoukopé is one of the
city’s biggest markets. The stalls are
usually run by women known as “mamas”, who often
employ children, sometimes as young as five. Poor
families often send their children to work for the
“mamas”. These young boys and girls get up at dawn,
carry heavy loads and perform all kinds of work. School
doesn’t exist for them.
L
Supporting the Kekeli Center…
Aware of this situation, the Carmelite nuns from
the Védruna charity opened the Kekeli Center inside
the market in 2006 to help these child workers find
the road to school again. Confronted with the
incomprehension of the parents and the “mamas”, who
do not understand the importance of children going
to school, the staff has to dialogue on a daily basis to
get children to come to the center. They also have to
fight hard to continue their action, which depends on
financial support. Since this year, the Kekeli Center
has benefited from assistance from Colas via Colas
Life and the “On the Road to School” program. To
report on the action the company has supported, JeanPierre Demollière, head of quarry sales at Siadoux,
Sograr and Sablières du Razès (Colas Sud-Ouest and
Screg Sud-Ouest), and his son Quentin traveled to
Lomé in June. “When we got to the market, I realized
what it meant to be here” said Jean-Pierre. “I had to
report back to Group employees about the lives of the
child workers and the work done by the Kekeli Center,
with Colas’ support. I also had to see what more we
could do to help.” Quentin described his first
impressions, “I didn’t realize it would be so tough. I felt
ok when I was there, just taking it all in. But it was only
afterwards that I fully grasped the poverty, people’s
living conditions, the child workers.”
… and its many actions
Greeted warmly at the Kekeli Center by beaming
smiles and cries of "Bonne arrivée"*, Jean-Pierre and
Quentin met the staff and observed some of the
activities: a bridging class to help older children
reintegrate into the mainstream school system, a
library, a motor skills workshop for small children and
a painting workshop. The center also runs literacy
classes for adults and organizes interaction with deaf
children from a special school. Kekeli plays a leading
role in combating all forms of violence against children.
A member of Relutet, the network against child
sponsorship 75
trafficking in Togo, Kekeli covers legal expenses,
provides medical care and helps the children to
reintegrate into families. Of the many actions taken by
the staff, Jean-Pierre chose to report on the “street
work”. “Mensa took us to the market and explained her
method for encouraging children to come to the
center. You have to win their trust as well as the trust
of the bosses. That can be hard, but you have to
persevere. Chimène, a social worker, also goes around
the market informing women about their rights.” Invited
to take part in a beginner’s painting workshop with
children from the market, Quentin said, “We had a nice
time together. There was practically no difference
between me and them. We were all just young people
painting.”
What next?
When we asked Jean-Pierre and Quentin what
motivated them to travel to Togo, they answered in
unison, “To do something concrete. What we saw here
was definitely a reality check… Even if there is poverty
in France, most children at least have the basics,
meaning education, food and clothes. The kids here
have nothing.” And what do they plan to do now that
they’re back in France? “The library at the Kekeli
Center has no recent books. Quentin has started to
collect comics at his school. And I plan to collect books
and material from Group employees.” Philippe Eponon,
head of Colas Togo, appreciates what the NGO has
accomplished and is looking at what the subsidiary
can do to help “On the Road to School” continue its
work in Togo.
*"Good arrival", a welcome greeting often used in Western Africa.
For more information about the program and the
action in Vietnam, Togo and Croatia:
www.enroutepourlecole.com
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76 sponsorship
Lengguru: Indonesia’s
treasure trove of biodiversity
Lengguru
Fold Belt
With support from Colas Indonesia, France’s
Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)
and Indonesian researchers mounted the first large-scale
expedition into the Lengguru Fold Belt in West Papua,
Indonesia. They discovered one of the world’s last
unexplored territories.
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LOCAL INITIATIVES
all began with Kadarusman, a researcher
from Sorong in West Papua, who wanted
to write a biology thesis on rainbow fish
in his region, specifically the Vogelkop (Bird’s Head)
Peninsula. Enters an ichthyologist* and geneticist from
the Montpellier branch of the IRD, Laurent Pouyaud.
Interested in Kadarusman’s topic, Laurent became the
co-supervisor of his thesis. This story, which began in
2007, also included Colas Indonesia from the outset. The
IRD received support from the company to fund the first
field expedition. “Colas Indonesia, which had supported
the IRD in the past, responded positively to our application
for a grant. Colas was our sole source of support and
without it we would not have been able to undertake
new research each year, which led to a larger-scale
expedition in 2010 in the Lengguru Fold Belt,” explains
Laurent Pouyaud.
It
Rainbow fish in a biodiversity study
The Lengguru Fold Belt is one of the last unexplored
corners of the planet. Located on the remote edge of
Asia, Australia and the Pacific, it is fairly inhospitable
and inaccessible. The rugged karst** mountains, isolated
by deep valleys, are a natural fortress for highly
developed forest ecosystems and even richer
biodiversity than in Brazil or Colombia. “The aim of our
2010 expedition was to study the structuring role of
karst in the biodiversity of freshwater fish,” underlines
Laurent Pouyaud. “As the project developed and the
team formed, the theme was expanded to new
disciplines – ornithology, amphibiology, hydrology,
paleontology, archaeology and speleology.” Many
scientists were interested in the program as the biology,
archaeology and even geography of the region are
relatively unknown.
sponsorship 77
of their research, the researchers’ professionalism and
passion, and their working principles.” They added, “The
discoveries they have made and will make significantly
enhance understanding of biodiversity. We were also
interested in supporting a program that involved French
researchers, especially such a passionate group. In
addition, the IRD takes a humble approach in the
countries where it conducts research, and always works
with local researchers. That’s not unlike Colas’ approach
in the countries where it operates. Lastly, the IRD achieves
excellent results on a reasonable budget: that efficient
pragmatism is also a value that Colas shares.”
Unexpected discoveries
Since they returned from the expedition, the teams
have been working on the results of their discoveries.
They have plenty of material! “We have been able to
identify at least fifteen new species of fish, including
rainbow fish, gobies and a species of cave fish without
pigmentation or eyes,” enthuses Laurent Pouyaud. “New
species of mammals, insects and amphibians, including
a frog that carries its offspring on its back, were also
discovered.” The archaeologists discovered several sites
with cave paintings and sculptures never previously
described in Papua. The geologists observed original
phenomena of karst erosion. The multi-year research
program to come will deepen and broaden their research.
In the meantime, Kadarusman and the researchers from
IRD will share their discoveries with the employees of
Colas Indonesia. A generous, human sponsorship
project, like the people involved in this inspiring FrancoIndonesian story. * A zoologist specialized in fish. **Sculpted by corrosion of the
limestone. *** A large flat-floored depression covered with alluvium
and enclosed by rock formations.
A Franco-Indonesian partnership
In October 2010 Kadarusman, Laurent Pouyaud and
some 50 other researchers, French and Indonesian,
boarded a boat from Sorong Fisheries Academy (Apsor)
and headed to Lengguru Fold Belt. The team explored
five target areas: the Lengguru River, the area around
Lake Kamakawalar, Kayumerah Bay and the area around
Lake Mbuta, Arguni Bay and the area around Lake
Sewiki, and lastly the area around the Kuweri polje***.
Christophe Voy, manager of Colas Indonesia, and Victor
Sitorus, vice-president of Indonesian subsidiary Wasco,
visited the site and admired the beauty of the rugged
terrain and especially the scientists’ work. “We chose to
support the IRD for three main reasons: the importance
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78 sponsorship
COLAS FOUNDATION
Piotr Klemensiewicz was
born in Marseille in 1956,
and now lives and works
between Berlin and
Marseille, where he
teaches at the School of
Fine Arts. His work has
been exhibited in France
and internationally in
solo and group shows,
and has often been
acquired by public and
private collections.
Piotr Klemensiewicz
“I like art to have a real function instead of being
locked away in a vault.”
ou were selected by the Colas
Foundation. How did you address the
theme of the road in your painting?
Piotr Klemensiewicz: I decided to combine pictorial
principles from two series I’ve been working on for many
years. From the “Stacks” series, I borrowed the idea of
an object anchored in the earth, a horizon and a
background. From my work on “Houses”, I kept the motif
of the home, which for me is associated with roads
because a road leads you home.
Y
Your road leads up to the stars…
P. K.: I wanted to find a way to give depth to the road
within the square format. So I decided to extend it beyond
the horizon. That creates a contrast, which I love, between
the curve of the road and the broken lines of the
constellation. To give the road more presence, I let it
continue beyond the frame.
Your painting will travel around the Group’s
subsidiaries. What do you think of that?
P. K.: I like art to have a real function instead of being
locked away in a vault: this way my painting will be in
direct contact with the people who work for and visit
Colas. I think that’s a really interesting approach and I
commend Colas for taking the courageous step of
sponsoring contemporary art. That’s quite rare in France,
which is a pity, because it produces more original, more
generous collections. ROUTES No. 27 – October 2011
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acknowledgements 79
Olivier Unique, Emmanuel Verwaerde,
Sébastien Dreux, Franck Cavaciuti,
Hugues Rouby, Mickael Flaviano,
Pierre-Yves Esparcieux, Nicolas Darroux,
Thomas Lebrun, José Pereira, Sébastien Arnal,
Michel Anzalone, Julien Hanns, Yann Normant,
Alvaro Quintero, Vincent Varenne,
Stéphane Ruffioni, Marc Guérin,
Didier Le Carre, Frédéric Perrin, Albert Lefret,
Sylvie Chastanet, Johan De Puysseleyr,
Anna Lipko, Philippe Commarmond,
Germain Wicht, Chris Humphrey,
Ben Northey, Jon Fuglestad, Laurent Bruno,
Pierre Bornet, Palmerina Di-Marco,
Bruno Morel, Thierry Lartisant, Marc Folny,
Jean-Paul Chauvet, Hélène Lessard,
Roger Hayner, Jean-Paul Fort,
Jean-Martin Croteau, Poul E Bruun,
Hervé Le Joliff, François Dillies,
Romain Lassonery, Houssam Aidi,
Tarik Jordane, Faïçal Lahmansi, Vincent Grossi.
Routes, a Colas Group magazine, 7, place René-Clair, 92653 Boulogne-Billancourt, France. Tel.: 01 47 61 75 00.
www.colas.com. ISSN: 0988-6907. Director of publication: Hervé Le Bouc. Managing Editor and Editor-in-Chief:
Sophie Sadeler. Copy: Colas, Angie. Photos credits: Agence Rouge (p. 68/69, 74), Agence VU (p. 33 bottom), S. Arbour (p. 38),
J.-M. Barrère (p. 17 top), J. Bertrand (p. 9 top, 14 top 16, 19 top, 42, 47, 51, 52, 62 top, 64, 67 bottom), J.-D. Billaud
(p. 44/45), F. Bocquet (p. 7), P. Calmettes (p. 11), M. Colin (p. 14 bottom, 78), Corbis (cover), M. Corneliussen (p. 6 bottom),
A. Dauphin (p. 34), D. Dijoux (p. 36), N. Dohr (p. 18 bottom, 55), M. Dunet (p. 40), J. Fernandes (p. 5), A. Février (p. 49),
Foto Kurti (p. 13), D. Giannelli (p. 19 bottom, 37, 56), F. Haslin (p. 65 bottom), M. Kaczmarczyk (p. 15), P. Laurent (p. 4),
A. Montaufier (p. 8, 12 top), E. Martin/Blacksight Productions (p. 9 bottom), L. Martorell (p. 6 top), C. Pedrotti (p. 18 top),
P. Pluchon/Une Terre d’Images (p. 57), A. Prat/ACP Photos (p. 17 bottom), F. Rhodes (p. 58, 67 top), O. Roller (p. 3),
Sipa (p. 28/33 top, 35, 41), Y. Soulabaille (p. 10 bottom, 39), E. Sourget (p. 72), P. Thébault (p. 20, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26,
48), J. Thomazo (p. 12 bottom), Photothèque Colas (p. 10 top, 43, 53, 54, 59, 60, 61, 62 bottom, 63, 65 top, 66, 76), DR.
Translation: VO Paris. Design and production:
01 55 34 46 00 (ref. ROUT027). 53,000 copies printed by IME
(ISO 14001-certified printer) on Cocoon silk paper (100% recycled and FSC-approved) using plant oil-based inks, cover finished
using 100% biodegradable acrylic varnish. The carbon footprint for production, packaging and shipment of this issue is
0.55 kg of CO2 per copy. Enveloping is performed by APM (protected workshop employing disabled people in Melun, France).
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ROUTES
Colas Group magazine number 27 - October 2011
En route
Morocco
Colas plays key role
in major projects
Piotr Klemensiewicz
«Droga»
2010
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ROUTES No. 27 – October 2011
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